Black Panther and the Legacy of Chadwick Boseman

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On August 28 of this year, it was announced to the world that the ever-talented actor, Chadwick Boseman, had died of cancer at the age of 43. He passed away at his home in Los Angeles in the company of his wife and family. Boseman was diagnosed with colon cancer four years prior but never went public with his illness.

This shocking news ricocheted around the world. Everyone was caught off guard. No one, not even the directors, producers, and actors he had worked within that course of time had any idea that he’d been ill. When my friend told me that morning, I thought they were making a sick joke to match the tragedies of 2020. I was wrong.

“A true fighter, Chadwick persevered through it all, and brought you many of the films you have come to love so much,” his family said in a heartfelt statement. “From Marshall to Da 5 Bloods, August Wilson's Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and several more - all were filmed during and between countless surgeries and chemotherapy.”

Boseman was best known for his roles as James Brown, Jackie Robinson, and most famously as the ruler of Wakanda in Marvel’s Black Panther. Black Panther was a record-breaking blockbuster success. It was clear that he was destined to embody that hero, and it’s a tragedy that he won’t be able to step in that role again.

It was the honor of his career to bring King T’Challa to life in Black Panther.

Grieving the death of celebrities has always felt quite weird to me. Despite them being a perfect stranger, I’ve cried and mourned for artists I have admired and died too soon.

We mourn them because they can represent our past or our youth; because their art has been a consistent comfort in our lives. Because they will never create anything new again.

The movies Boseman created have essentially become a vessel of time, transporting us back to when he still walked this Earth.

On Boseman’s birthday in November, a few months after he passed, I decided to watch Black Panther for the umpteenth time. I wanted to re-examine the experience it gave me back in 2018 as an audience member as well as an audience to its impact on black people around the world. Re-examining it reminded me, once again, why it was such a cultural touchstone.

Yes, it definitely is another installment of Marvel’s billion-dollar Cinematic Universe. However, all other superhero movies have been a Western-Man’s wet dream. Iron Man, Captain America, Ant-Man – all of them have been a fictional attempt to rewrite 9/11, to save ‘Merica.

In the MCU, the rest of the world knows Wakanda was a third world country located in sub-Saharan Africa. Under the cloak of a rainforest is actually a technologically advanced African nation, untouched by the horrors of Western colonialism.

Ryan Coogler and his team of experts, set and costume designers, and screenwriters, had to ask what does liberation looks like in the hands of Black people?

Coogler can’t be credited for defining black liberation, but this move let us glimpse into one version of it. Wakanda offered an Afrofutrist reimagining of a future filled with arts, religion, science, and technology from a Black perspective. It unapologetically celebrated the uniqueness and innovation of Afro culture. We see a futuristic nation that is also steeped in ancient African traditions, social systems, and Black identity.

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And the leader of this visionary world? T’Challa. The King of Wakanda and protector of his people. The character has been seen as an inspiration for kids around the world – especially young black children, who rarely get to see themselves reflected in the heroes they watch on screen.

It wasn’t just children who Boseman inspired. This film came at a time where the importance of diversity and representation on screen was in demand. Cosplayers and adult fans were super keen to commemorate T’Challa and their favourite Black Panther characters.

Alternatively, Boseman’s death came after a summer of protests sparked by the murder of George Floyd. His death added a layer of grief for black folks in America and around the world.

After revisiting Black Panther, I’m confident in saying that the film did representation right with one of the greatest black ensembles in pop culture. But in 2020 we’ve moved beyond just representation. Black Panther created a hero, it created a world, it reimagined history without the violence of colonialism. Black Panther was a bubble in space in time where a Black nation is free of global anti-blackness, and they are flourishing.

What an honour to have watched Boseman exist in such a beautiful world.


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Alannah Link

Alannah is a writer whose vivid self-awareness often veers into self-consciousness. She can be found either watching the latest A24 flick, spending too much money at the local bookstore, or curating a thematic Spotify playlist.

Blog: TheCrookedFriend

5 Reasons Why 'When Harry Met Sally' is the Perfect Romantic Comedy

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‘When Harry Met Sally’ was released in July 1989 and just over 30 years later, we can still see its impact on pop culture and the world of romance. I, for one, would argue that it’s the blueprint for all romantic comedies that came after it.

From it’s quotable one-liners, the autumnal NYC scenery, to the iconic Carrie Fisher – here are 5 reasons why ‘When Harry Met Sally’ is the perfect Romantic Comedy.

5. The main characters are nut-jobs, but in the most endearing way possible

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‘When Harry Met Sally’ opens in 1977 when the title characters are forced to take an 18-hour road trip from Chicago to New York City. Almost instantly, their characters clash.

Harry is the over-sexed pessimist who uses humour to guise his sadness. And Sally is the romantically naïve optimist who’s in the dictionary next to the phrase “high maintenance”.

Billy Crystal isn’t an impossibly dashing romantic lead. He looks like a guy you’d walk past on a street. If you had given that script to the wrong person, Harry would’ve been absolutely miserable. But Crystal was able to soften the character’s cynicism with charm.

Sally’s anal retentiveness isn’t a quirky quality likened by manic pixie dream girls. When she carefully analyzes every vegetable she pulls from the salad bar, and demands the ice-cream be beside the pie, not on top – it’s just who she is, and while easily maddening, Meg Ryan makes it endearing.  

4. The film feels like a warm cup of Autumn

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When I think of autumn, I think of the famous scene where Harry and Sally are strolling through a golden brown Central Park, with Sally wearing a grey bowler hat and tweed pants, and Harry in a brown leather jacket.  

Some of my favourite parts are the ones where the two characters are wrapped in blankets in their own separate beds, talking on the phone while watching the same show. While the film itself is aesthetically cozy, their conversations bring another sense of comfort, like the kind you feel when you talk to that person who is always willing to listen to your endless problems and musings.

Autumn is also the season of transition, and it just so happens to be the point in the film where the title characters feelings for one another change. I mean, who wouldn’t want to fall in love to Harry Connick Jr’s big-band/jazz soundtrack?

At the end of the day, ‘When Harry Met Sally’ is the quintessential autumn movie. It tastes like a warm cup of apple cider, feels like a thick, knit sweater, and sounds like crisp leaves crunching under our feet. It’s as bittersweet as unrequited love.

3. Carrie Fisher… need I say more?

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When someone says Carrie Fisher, most people think of Princess Leia, and I mean… I do too. But what quickly follows is her role as Marie, Sally’s best friend in ‘When Harry Met Sally’.

Rom Coms just couldn’t get the best friend and B-romance right after Carrie Fisher perfected it in this film. She just set the bar too high.

Marie is a one-liner machine. Her romance with Harry’s best friend juxtaposes the title characters’ 12-year long stint of unrequited love as they almost immediately tie the knot. Marie and her partner coach their friends through romantic crises and turn to one another, grateful that they found a stable partnership while their peers are suffering in singledom.

It takes an incredible actor to steal the show as a side character, and Carrie Fisher does just that.

2. The story and script are timeless

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Nora Ephron’s ability to write believable women and believable relationships with such sincerity is exactly what got her the Oscar nod for ‘When Harry Met Sally’.

The dialogue is witty and realistically depicts life and dating in 1980s New York City. The amount of iconic scenes and quotes the movie contains is remarkable, including the infamous fake-orgasm scene famously followed by “I’ll have what she’s having.”

While each character is fully developed, Harry and Sally are stripped of most things except for their relationships with one another. Their personalities are revealed through conversation, and in contrast with one another. Their love story is grounded by interspersed interviews of actors retelling heart-warming love stories of real-life couples, and ends, fittingly, with Harry and Sally telling theirs.

Despite its curly wired landline phones and shoulder pads, these are the things that make it feel timeless.

1. The romance is a perfect slow-burn

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So many romantic comedies condense the romance into one night or a week. The thing about romance is that the longer it swells up, the sweeter the release is (if you know what I mean.)

‘When Harry Met Sally’ spans over 12 years. We get to see them grow up, mature and make mistakes. The story unfolds through low-stakes hangouts and well-written conversations that take place during walks against the backdrop of autumnal Central Park. They spend a day at the MET, banter in silly voices, and eat sandwiches at Jewish Delis.

When Harry and Sally start realizing they have feelings for one another, it feels so organic and real. You feel like their friends who so obviously know that the two are meant for each other but just can’t get over their own reservations. It tugs at the heartstrings, the only way a perfect romantic comedy can.


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Alannah Link

Alannah is a writer whose vivid self-awareness often veers into self-consciousness. She can be found either watching the latest A24 flick, spending too much money at the local bookstore, or curating a thematic Spotify playlist.

Check out Alannah’s ‘When Harry Met Sally’ Spotify playlist here: jewish deli dates & witty banter

Blog: TheCrookedFriend